The 15,322 persons deprived of liberty were released from March 17 to June 22 by the “authority of courts” following a directive by the Supreme Court to send home those awaiting trial but remain in prison because they could not afford bail.
Of the total number of released prisoners, the DILG said 5,910 are from Metro Manila, 1,557 are from Calabarzon, 1,487 from Central Visayas, 1,041 from Central Luzon, 897 from Zamboanga Peninsula, 762 from Northern Mindanao and the rest are from other regions.
The majority of the freed inmates were senior citizens and those with “light or bailable offenses,” the DILG said in a statement.
Interior Secretary Eduardo Año said there are 783 COVID-19 cases in various BJMP detention centers and 549 of those who tested positive for the virus have recovered.
Meanwhile, the total count of infected BJMP personnel now stands at 135 with 90 recoveries.
Año said they would continue to monitor coronavirus disease cases among detainees.
“Tinututukan po namin ang sitwasyon sa mga BJMP jail sa buong bansa at hindi namin pinapabayaan ang mga COVID-19 positive cases. Sa katunayan, marami na ang gumaling at hindi kami bibitaw hanggang bawat isa sa kanila ay maka-recover na,” Año said in the same statement.
(We are closely monitoring the situation at the BJMP jails across the country and we will not take for granted the COVID-19 positive cases. In truth, a lot of inmates have recovered and we will not stop until all of them have recovered.)
The BJMP, an attached agency of the DILG, currently has six Ligtas COVID Centers, which are isolation facilities with 918-bed capacity. Ligtas COVID Centers are located in Quezon City, San Fernando City, Cebu City, Mandaue City, Pagbilao in Quezon province and Zamboanga City.
The BJMP also enforced an electronic dalaw (e-Dalaw) program, which allows inmates to talk to their relatives and legal counsels online while jail visits are suspended.
Covid-19 outbreaks have been reported at some of the country’s most overcrowded jails, affecting both inmates as well as corrections personnel.
Social distancing is all but impossible in the country’s prison system, where cells are sometimes filled to five times their capacity due to inadequate infrastructure and a slow-moving and overburdened judicial system.
Overcrowding has become an even greater problem since President Rodrigo Duterte launched a drug crackdown in 2016 that has seen thousands sent to prison.
Among those which have reported outbreaks are the Quezon City Jail in the capital Manila, a facility so crowded that inmates take turns sleeping on staircases and open-air basketball courts.
The outbreaks have fuelled calls from rights groups for the early release of prisoners charged with non-violent offenses as well as the sick and elderly.
As of today, the Philippines has recorded 37,514 coronavirus infections and 1,266 deaths.